Catherine Sevenau

Opener of doors, teller of tales, family scribe.

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You are here: Home / THROUGH ANY GIVEN DOOR (Individual Posts) / 4. Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies / 3.43 Rainbows and Red Devils

3.43 Rainbows and Red Devils

November 12, 2018 By Catherine Sevenau 27 Comments

Mom, La Habra, early 1960s

Fall of 1968 • Whittier ~ Over the years Mom managed to get along. She worked for room and board with a small monthly salary for clothes, her car, doctor bills, and prescriptions. By the end, she couldn’t hold a job, couldn’t care for herself, the hospitals wouldn’t keep her anymore, and family refused to take her in. No longer permitted to carry her suitcase through their doors, the children she abandoned had abandoned her, not to punish her, but to get away from her.

She spent much of her life seeking help, looking for cures, trying to find out what was wrong. She never did. I don’t know what was wrong with her either. She wasn’t crazy or insane, nor was she demented or deranged. She was desperate at times, habitually detached, and regularly depressed. You might even think her disturbed (one of the things she was disturbed about most was having children). Yes, she was narcissistic and yes, she was a hypochondriac, but all the drugs she took didn’t help. She had several doctors—none aware of who was prescribing what, nor how much she was taking—creating a system that worked well for her. Having lifted a number of their prescription pads, she could write her own. One doctor thought perhaps shock treatments might work. Mom thought maybe they did. I didn’t. The life in her eyes was dimmed even more.

She once bought a mayonnaise jar of speed from Joe Duchi. Joe, Betty’s husband’s older brother, was a convicted felon just out of San Quentin. A part of their catch-and-release program, his history ranged from stealing garbage cans and dealing drugs to armed robbery and murder. Mom paid him $35 for what turned out to be a quart-sized jar of vitamin C tablets. That was a lot of money considering it was half her monthly salary beyond room and board. Joe was back in prison by the time she figured it out. Those were probably the only pills she never took.

Speed, Hot Cross Buns and Dexies kept her weight down and restored her energy. Rainbows, Red Devils, and Yellow Jackets got her through the nights. Codeine eased her pain and Librium calmed her days. She washed them down with Alka-Seltzer or a little whiskey. Toward the end, she graduated to the big guns, Thorazine and Stelazine. She thought drugs were the answer to whatever ailed her, but nothing eased her pain. She didn’t take them to feel good, she took them to feel less bad.

After the month with her niece, Mom drifted back to southern California. In September she turned 53. In early November, the week before she died, she was mugged and robbed. Badly shaken, it may have been the final incident that pushed her over the edge. On November 9, she checked into a small motel on Whittier Blvd., a block from the police station in one direction and a hospital in the other. The following morning she was found by the maid. Dressed in her black slip, propped up in the middle of the single bed, my mother had downed more than enough sleeping capsules and alcohol to be certain she couldn’t be saved this time, a plastic bag over her head and taped around her neck, just to make sure. Her Certificate of Death states: immediate cause of death, ASPHYXIA, PLASTIC BAG OVER FACE, in all caps. My mother took her own life not because she’d gone mad, but because she was done.

Chuck

The Whittier police called Carleen, and Carleen called Chuck. Chuck said, “She’s your mother, you go identify her.

Just the idea of needing help, but worse, of having to ask for it, comes hard in my family. No wonder. My sister went to the morgue by herself. My brother-in-law added another nail to his coffin.

I was baffled and befuddled, not that Mom was dead, but that I fell apart. At first I was confused, like I didn’t get what Carleen had told me. The room was white and all I could hear was a silent roar. A couple of minutes passed. I simply sat there, not breathing, perplexed. And when it hit me, a river poured out of me, watering my regret as I slumped on my sister’s couch: regret for my mother, for her wasted life, for myself, for the dashed chances of her loving me, my slim chances evaporating into none, and regret that I would never understand the why of it all. I also wanted her to apologize, not so much for being a crappy mother, but for the disappointing way things turned out. My mind was relieved. My body was slammed by a hurricane.

to be continued…

© 2018. Catherine Sevenau.
All rights reserved.

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Comments

  1. Barbara Jacobsen says

    November 19, 2018 at 8:07 pm

    My two oldest sisters were caught in similar tragedies, including shock treatments, and no one really knew how to help. Thank heavens there’s a lot more info these days about mental illness, and ways to get help. I think your mom would be grateful for your in-depth assessment of her and, finally, your compassion after so much rejection and pain and confusion. So well written. You did for a lot of us!

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 26, 2018 at 2:56 pm

      I’m sure my mother would have loved this story. My father however…

      Reply
  2. Eric Hodges says

    November 14, 2018 at 10:33 am

    Holy shit!!

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 14, 2018 at 10:36 am

      I hear you my friend!

      Reply
  3. susan Dalberg says

    November 13, 2018 at 11:40 pm

    The oxygen just got sucked out of this room. I send my hugs and love. There are some incidents that even time doesn’t cure. You wrote of it beautifully.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 14, 2018 at 7:47 am

      Maybe that’s why I forget to breathe at times…

      Reply
  4. Melissa Sevenau says

    November 13, 2018 at 3:29 pm

    Wow. You are a truly gifted writer and such an amazingly strong woman. I love you so.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 13, 2018 at 4:40 pm

      thank you my dear

      Reply
  5. Clare C. says

    November 12, 2018 at 4:11 pm

    That was beautifully written, even if painful to read.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 6:00 pm

      Thank you Clare.

      Reply
  6. Richard Sinay says

    November 12, 2018 at 4:05 pm

    There is no consolation for such a loss and words are no consolation to you. It is a hand dealt that only those who have received can understand. You are brave to share such a story. It is heartbreaking. No solace can compensate for a loss like that. It was a time that doctors offered no real remedy. Sylvia Plath had the same challenges. She lasted only to 30. Your mom fought hard. She was a victim of unresolved issues. “The mind is it’s own place and in itself can make a heaven of hell or a hell of heaven.” John Milton

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 6:01 pm

      Thanks Richard

      Reply
  7. Susie Price says

    November 12, 2018 at 3:47 pm

    What pain for all of you. My aunt had electric shock treatments several times and my grandparents took care of my brother and me while our mom went back to Illinois to care for her sister’s 5 kids. My aunt’s husband was a doctor… The mysteries of the human mind… What causes such absolute unhappiness…?

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 6:05 pm

      My mother may have had shock treatments more than once, but no one is left to confirm that. I tried to get her records from Norwalk and Camarillo to no avail. I write about the rest in the next three chapters as to perhaps why. And then, I’m done.

      Reply
  8. Cindy says

    November 12, 2018 at 12:42 pm

    I see you on the dance floor, tall, statuesque, grounded, gliding; from the outside, you look like someone gently embraced by life, wrapped in a space where sadness, pain and brutality might brush up against you, but never barge in. And then I read your writing and am reminded how external costumes can so easily mask deeper truths. Thank you for your sharing.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 12:53 pm

      I’m grateful to have expanded to include both parts. I prefer the dancing though.

      Reply
      • Cindy says

        November 26, 2018 at 8:22 pm

        I hear you on that one. Given the darkness as a backdrop, the dance shines even brighter.

        Reply
  9. Elke says

    November 12, 2018 at 12:34 pm

    Tears for you! Love and hugs! You are a great writer!

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 12:37 pm

      Thank you Elke.

      Reply
  10. Juliette Andrews says

    November 12, 2018 at 12:05 pm

    I am crying, crying crying. That is all I can say. J

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 12:38 pm

      I have tissues…

      Reply
  11. Jim Chatfield says

    November 12, 2018 at 11:16 am

    That had to be hard on you to lose your mother that way. Death of family member is always hard I know. Out of our 8 children (combined family) we only have 4 daughters left so I know the hurt death brings. My heart goes out to you.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 11:18 am

      Thank you Jim.

      Reply
  12. Connie Anderson says

    November 12, 2018 at 11:09 am

    There’s several instances of mental illness and alcoholism in my family. No matter the cause, it’s always tragic when people succumb to their demons. It affects everyone in their universe. You write about it well, and my heart goes out to you.

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 11:10 am

      Thank you.

      Reply
  13. Kay says

    November 12, 2018 at 10:16 am

    I can only imagine. Life is valuable. I wouldn’t wish this outcome for anyone. Hugs

    Reply
    • Catherine Sevenau says

      November 12, 2018 at 10:27 am

      Hugs received, thank you.

      Reply

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Web Serial: Front Matter

0.i Teller of Tales,  Family Line

0.ii Dedications, Billet-Doux, Credits

0.iii Prologue

Web Serial: Part I, Faded Snapshots

1.01 Part I, Faded Snapshots, Sonora

1.02 104 Green Street

1.03 A Chicken Named Blackie

1.04 Lucky Strike Girl

1.05 Summer Camping

1.06 Chico and Grandma Chatfield

1.07 Itty-Bitty Balls of Fluff

1.08 Might as Well be Hung for a Sheep

1.09 Brandi’s and Bingo

1.10 Wolf at the Door

1.11 Nothing But the Best

1.12 Larry’s New Diary, Jan 1947

1.13 Larry’s Diary, Feb-Mar 1947

1.14 Heathens and Hellions

1.15 Larry’s Diary, Apr-May 1947

1.16 Missive to Marceline

1.17 A California Thistle

1.18 We Love Milkshakes!

1.19 Larry’s Diary, Jun-Jul 1947

1.20 Larry’s Diary, Aug-Sep 1947

1.21 Larry’s Diary, Oct 1947

1.22 Brusha, Brusha, Brusha …

1.23 Larry’s Diary, Nov 1947

1.24 Larry’s Diary, Dec 1947

1.25 Larry’s Diary, Jan-Jul 1948

1.26 1948 Small Town Gossip

1.27 Plucked From the Womb

1.28 Death of Gordon Chatfield

1.29 Larry’s Diary, Mar 1949

1.30 Larry’s Diary, Apr 1949

1.31 Larry’s Diary, May 1949

1.32 Dad, God, and the Holy Ghost

1.33 Benedict Arnold & Eleanor Roosevelt

1.34 Larry’s Diary, Jun 1949

1.35 Larry’s Diary, Jul 1949

1.36 Holy Cards, Hell, and High Water

1.37 Larry’s Diary, Aug 1949

1.38 Buck Fever, Sep 1949

1.39 Larry’s Diary, Oct 1949

1.40 Larry’s Diary, Nov 1949

1.41 Larry’s Diary, Dec 1949

1.42 The Sight of Blood

1.43 Larry’s Diary, Apr 1950; Don’t Go

1.44 Larry’s Diary, May 1950

1.45 Larry’s Diary, Jun 1950

1.46 Larry’s Diary, July 1950

1.47 Summer 1950, Bounty Hunter

1.48 Larry’s Diary, Aug 1950

1.49 Larry’s Diary, Sep 1950

1.50 Larry’s Diary, Oct 1950

1.51 Larry’s Diary, Nov 1950

1.52 Larry’s Diary, Dec 1950

1.53 Larry’s Diary, Jan 1951

1.54 Larry’s Diary, Feb 1951

1.55 Larry’s Diary, Mar 1951

1.56 1951 • Popcorn Girl

1.57 Larry’s Diary, Apr 1951

1.58 Billet-doux from Mom

1.59 Larry’s Diary, May 1951

1.60 Larry’s Diary, Jun 1951

1.61 Larry’s Diary, Jul 1951

1.62 Not MY Mother

1.63 Larry’s Diary, Aug 1951

1.64 Larry’s Diary, Sep 1951

1.65 Larry’s Diary, Oct 1951

1.66 Larry’s Diary, Nov-Dec 1951

1.67 Larry’s Diary, Jan 1952

1.68 Larry’s Diary, Feb 1952

1.69 Larry’s Diary, Mar 1952

1.70 Larry’s Diary, Apr 1952

1.71 Umpteenth Time

1.72 Larry’s Diary, May 1952

1.73 Letter from Mom to Verda

1.74 Larry’s Diary, Jun 1952

1.75 Tennis and Tonsils

1.76 Larry’s Diary, Jul 1952

1.77 Larry’s Diary, Aug 1952

1.78 Larry’s Diary, Sep 1952

1.79 2nd Letter to Verda

1.80 Larry’s Diary, Oct-Nov 1952

1.81 Larry’s Diary, Dec 1952

1.82 Carleen & Chuck, 1952-53

1.83 Mom’s Letter to Nellie, Mar 1953

1.84 A Wedding and Graduation, 1953

1.85 Summer Solstice, 1953 (1)

1.86 Summer Solstice, 1953 (2)

1.87 Summer 1953, Minnesota

1.88 From Betty’s Best Friend

1.89 Pick-Up Stix, Sep 1953

1.90 Larry’s Diary, Misc Entries 1953

1.91 Private Matters, 1953-1954

Web Serial: Part II, Torn Pictures

2.01 Torn Pictures, San Jose 1954

2.02 Blackened Toast

2.03 Small Talk

2.04 Uncle George Day

2.05 Extra Prayers

2.06 Southern California

2.07 I Could Be Wrong

2.08 “Sprouse as in House”

2.09 Toy Soldiers

2.10 The Clue in the Diary 1954-1955

2.11 Canned Peas 1955

2.12 Jefferson Elementary

2.13 Mean Girls

2.14 Mr. Wonderful

2.14.1 From Larry to Gordon 1955

2.15 Gimme a Bromo

2.15.1 Grandma Nellie’s Demise 1956

2.16 Bless Me, Father

2.16.1 Thou Shalt Not Steal

2.17 Buttons and Bobbins

2.18 Perms

2.19 Conversations With God

2.20 Small Holy Cups

2.21 An 8×10 Glossy

2.22 Wedding Bells

2.23 High Finance

2.24 Hoity-Toity

2.25 The Great Pretender

2.26 Lovebirds

2.27 Year of Change 1956

2.28 Gaggle of Girlfriends 1957

2.29 Off to Paradise 1957

2.30 Manoa Valley

2.31 Needs Improvement

2.32 Worrisome Prayers

2.33 Come Hell or High Water

2.34 Christmas Eve

2.35 With Open Arms 1958

2.36 I Remember Bobby

2.37 Let. Me. Go.

2.38 What Did I Know?

2.39 Kakaroach

Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies

3.01 La Habra 1958

3.02 Orange Groves and Crackerboxes

3.03 Sierra Vista School 1958

3.04 Nana

3.05 A Mother’s Instinct 1959

3.06 My 1954 plain

3.07 Saving Grace

3.08 KRLA and KHJ

3.09 The Amana

3.10 Tie Pin and Cufflinks

3.11 Sunday Drives

3.12 Chutes and Ladders

3.13 Jesus, Mary, and Joseph

3.14 Waiting, Waiting, Waiting

3.15 Beach Camping

3.16 Smoke Gets in Your Eyes 1960s

3.17 Queen of Hearts

3.18 Gus the Helms Man

3.19 The Furies

3.20 Simon Legree

3.21 “Chu-uck”

3.22 “You Writin’ a Book?”

3.23 Purgatory

3.24 The Hillman Minx

3.25 “Listen, Dearie”

3.26 1644 Haight Street, 1960

3.27 Sweeney’s Candy Shop

3.28 A Longer Scorecard

3.29 The Sunset

3.30 It’s Not Fair!

3.31 Quit Gawking

3.32 Riffraff and Hippies

3.33 La Habra High 1961-1966 (part 1)

3.34 La Habra High (part 2)

3.35 Riverside Campground, Big Sur

3.36 Leaving the Hive

3.37 Summer in Europe

3.38 Homesick

3.39 “Oh Yeah?”

3.40 A Full Mass

3.41 Killing Time

3.42 Positively Haight Street

3.43 Rainbows and Red Devils

3.44 No Flowers

3.45 A Kind of Holiness

3.46 Sin and Prayer

Web Serial: Post Memoir Sketches

4.01 Unleashing the Flying Monkeys

4.02 Letters From Claudia

4.03 Letter from Liz

4.04 Elegy to My Father

4.05 My Sister Liz

4.06 I Must Have Lied

4.07 Final Migration

4.08 Cutty Sark and Carleen

4.09 Lore, Libel and Lies

4.10 Larry’s Later Life

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